Particle physics
Particle physics Aim: Find rules for particles interactions and transformations. Method: Collide particles at high energy to produce interactions and transformations, then track and analyse resulting particles. Particle creation and annihilation follows E = mc2. SLAC (90 GeV) electrons + positrons CERN LEP 1989-2000 (209 GeV) electrons + positrons Fermilab Tevatron (1.96 TeV) protons + antiprotons CERN LHC (2008-) proton + proton (7TeV) or lead nuclei (574TeV) Many hundreds of kinds of particles are produced. In 1964 Gell-Mann & Zweig independently propose the quark model to explain the ‘particle zoo’
CERN The Large Hadron Collider at CERN Protons collisions at 14 000 000 000 eV. Two ‘general purpose’ experiments: ATLAS and CMS detect collision products.
The ATLAS experiment at CERN
The ATLAS experiment at CERN
What the world is made from Generation LEPTONS charge rest energy QUARKS 1 electron neutrino -1 0.511 MeV ~0.3 eV up down +2/3 -1/3 2.4 MeV 4.8 MeV 2 muon muon-neutrino 106 MeV strange charm 104 MeV 1.27 GeV 3 tau tau-neutrino 1780 MeV bottom top -/13 4.2 GeV 171.2 GeV Virtual (exchange) particles mediate the fundamental forces strong force: gluons electromagnetic: photons weak interaction: W+, W-, Z gravity: graviton?
Families of particles Beta decay hadrons – made of quarks baryons – heavy particles made of 3 quarks mesons – medium mass particles, made of quark-antiquark pair leptons – light particles e.g. electron, neutrino Beta decay
Bosons: carriers of interactions force carrier electric charge rest energy explains electromagnetism photon everyday interactions including all chemistry weak interaction Z0 W+ W- +1 -1 93 GeV 81 GeV decay, other particle transformations strong interaction 8 different ‘colour combinations’ of gluons what holds nucleons & mesons together gravity ‘graviton’ conjectured but not detected